Analysis
Four things Liz Truss said in her victory speech
– and what she may have meant
Ben Quinn
From praising Boris Johnson to dealing with energy
crisis, Tory winner gave strong hints about her future priorities
Mon 5 Sep
2022 14.22 BST
After being
announced as the winner in the Conservative leadership contest, Liz Truss kept
her victory speech short, but there was enough to give some strong hints about
her future direction.
Here are
four sections of the speech, their context and what she may have meant.
“I also want to thank our outgoing leader, my friend,
Boris Johnson. Boris, you got Brexit done. You crushed Jeremy Corbyn. You
rolled out the vaccine, and you stood up to Vladimir Putin. You are admired
from Kyiv to Carlisle.”
A thank you
from the “continuity Johnson” candidate in recognition of those who supported
her as the next nearest thing to the outgoing PM. It will have jarred with
many, including with some Tory MPs, but Truss still paid tribute to the
“greatest hits” of Johnson’s otherwise tattered premiership.
Team Truss
will be celebrating, but it’s hard not to imagine them keeping half a wary eye
on reported suggestions, albeit whispered by nameless sources, that Johnson
could seek to stage a comeback if the Truss premiership falters.
“During this leadership campaign, I campaigned as a
Conservative and I will govern as a Conservative.”
Another
bone thrown to the tribal, Tory party faithful and pause for thought for anyone
expecting Truss to move towards drawing the shutters down on a particularly
polarising period of British politics.
Unlike past
leaders such as Cameron and Blair, who had sought to govern as centrist prime
ministers eager to keep floating voters on board, Truss appeared to nail her
(very blue) colours to the mast as she signalled her intention to govern as a
particularly ideological prime minister.
“I will deliver a bold plan to cut taxes and grow our
economy. I will deliver on the energy crisis, dealing with people’s energy
bills, but also dealing with the long-term issues we have on energy supply. And
I will deliver on the National Health Service.”
It was vague,
but Truss appeared to identify the three policy areas she will prioritise in
government.
Tax cuts
and economic growth have been the mantra throughout her leadership pitch, while
paying tribute to the NHS has become almost compulsory for Tory leaders since
David Cameron’s modernising project.
There was
also little detail about her plans for tackling the energy crisis amid
suggestions that she could introduce a price freeze for some bills, but her
words left space both for immediate action and a long-stated desire to make
structural changes.
“We will deliver a great victory for the Conservative
party in 2024.”
Almost as
clear as one can be in ruling out a snap election, something that had been
regarded as an outside bet but was still being mooted in some quarters as a
possibility.
It is
unsurprising that Truss wants time to have a shot at winning over more of the
public given how recent polls have showed her faring poorly against the Labour
leader, Keir Starmer.
Only 12% of
Britons expect Truss to be a good or great leader, while 52% expect her to be
poor or terrible, according to one from YouGov.

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